Ivan Massow and the white gay male intersectional deficit

Ivan Massow, the 1990s poster boy of gay respectability politics, has raised his head above the parapet once more. Lee Williscroft-Ferris takes issue.

Back in the 1990s, when I was beginning to make sense of being gay, Ivan Massow was something of a poster boy for the nascent ‘gay respectability’ movement. Centuries of castigation and persecution had finally given way to limited legal ‘tolerance’ and by the 1980s, gay men had come to be perceived by many as sexually liberal, promiscuous even. Unbound by the social expectations of monogamous marriage and childbearing that were the domain of our straight brethren at that time, it’s fair to say that gay men were, in some respects, making some progress.

Then came the AIDS panic and the consequent reactionary policies of the Thatcher government. Suddenly, sexually active gay men were irresponsible, decadent, to be feared. In Massow, the gay media found the perfect antidote. Clean-cut and masculine in a socio-normative sense, Massow, a self-made entrepreneur, provided the ideal counter-narrative to the rampant homophobia peddled by the mainstream media. ‘This is the person to emulate to become a respected member of society.’ White, cisgender, ‘masculine’ and materially successful.

Coincidentally, the 1980s also saw successive waves of social unrest in inner-city London, the result of decades of systemic racist oppression of Britain’s black communities at the hands of a stubbornly immobile political establishment and, pertinently, a Metropolitan Police force mired in institutional racism. This week, Tory minister Oliver Letwin, has been forced to apologise for ‘the offence caused’ by comments made in the aftermath of the 1985 Broadwater Farm riot. At that time, Letwin, an adviser to Margaret Thatcher, blamed the unrest on ‘bad moral attitudes’ in black communities. He also argued that setting up a £10m communities programme to tackle inner-city problems would do little more than ‘subsidise Rastafarian arts and crafts workshops’, stating that black ‘entrepreneurs will set up in the disco and drug trade.’

In Massow, the gay media found the perfect antidote. Clean-cut and masculine in a socio-normative sense, Massow, a self-made entrepreneur, provided the ideal counter-narrative to the rampant homophobia peddled by the mainstream media.

To anyone with an essence of a social conscience, the notion that unrest within black communities is the result of inherent ‘badness’ sends chills down the spine. The innate prejudice at the heart of Lewin’s arguments for resisting calls for community-based resolution is irrefutable.

20+ years later and Massow is now a fully-fledged Tory, having once been a flatmate of Michael Gove and having run to become the Conservative candidate in next year’s London mayoral election. Back in 2013, he used a column in the Evening Standard to decry what he perceives as a betrayal of the original principles of London Pride by a community he describes as ‘obsessed with drugs and sex.’

‘Don’t misunderstand me: I enjoy apps like Grindr (gay dating apps that supply you with a photo and precise distance of your nearest shag) as much as the next man. I admit to recreational drugs use in my distant past.

But am I the only one to notice that the gay scene today seems obsessed with drugs? Obsessed with sex. Unable to take responsibility for its part in the spread of HIV. Inhabiting a soulless and empty world of hedonism.’

Breathtaking generalisations and presumptions aside, once again, Massow – a wealthy white gay man with aspirations to join the political elite – was assuming the role of uninvited respectability ambassador for the LGBTQ+ community (or, more specifically, the ‘G’ community – intersectionality is a concept with which Massow is clearly wholly unacquainted). Fellow gay Tory and ‘famous’ out gay ex-soldier, James Wharton, clearly took his lead from Massow when he too sought to lecture gay men over the risks to their reputations of visiting gay saunas. The subsequent indignation was entirely justified.

Massow, the original champion of homosexual homogenisation, had this to say on the controversy now enveloping Letwin:

Gay men with a more fully rounded view of their own history have, naturally, reacted with disbelief to such a statement. First, Massow’s attempt at belittling the wholly understandable outcry at today’s revelations has echoes of a wider white tendency to dismiss the socio-economic legacy of slavery as ‘self-appointed victimhood’. It also wilfully seeks to detract from the fundamental issue that the author of such comments is still in a position of political power today. What’s more, in insinuating that this kind of transparent racism was ‘the norm’ 30 years ago (‘he just said what everyone else was thinking’), he does the longstanding intersectional battle for equality within his own community a great disservice.

Fellow gay Tory and ‘famous’ out gay ex-soldier, James Wharton, clearly took his lead from Massow when he too sought to lecture gay men over the risks to their reputations of visiting gay saunas.

It is abundantly clear from Massow’s incoherent musings that he is playing an extremely dangerous yet unfathomably transparent game of divide-and-rule. His assertion that racism in the 1980s can be excused by rampant homophobia perpetrated by BME Brits is utterly ludicrous. It presupposes the kind of ‘white gay men were the drivers in gay liberation’ nonsense that only Roland Emmerich could possibly make any sense of. It also props up a skewed hierarchy of ‘white victims’ vs. ‘black aggressors’ that is completely devoid of fact or truth. In addition, it fully overlooks the inconvenient truth that while white gays were fighting for the right to LGBTQ+ equality, their black counterparts were, and still are, embroiled in a battle for recognition of their very humanity and identity.

At the very heart of LGBTQ+ intersectionality is an acceptance that societal privilege favours white gay men more than any other stratum within our community. When it comes to the fight for truly global LGBTQ+ equality, Massow believes black people are latecomers to the party. Those of us with a modicum of intersectional insight know that they are rarely invited and that even when they are, it is often conditional.

Meanwhile, misguided white people, both LGBTQ+ and not, take to their keyboards to pontificate on what black people are entitled to regard as racist. In Massow’s case, he trivialises the scars of the British BME experience with his vacuous misrepresentations of BME and LGBTQ+ history. Instead, we should all continue to call and fight for redress for past injustices while approaching the future with a broader view of what equality really means and our own staging point on that journey.

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Lee Williscroft-Ferris

Lee is a 40 year-old left-handed dyspraxic vegan and spends his time between Northumberland and various other cities. He has written for several online and print magazines, including The Independent, Huffington Post UK and Reykjavik Grapevine. He is the founder of The Queerness. He likes Björk, Eurovision, animals, politics and his Beats headphones.

Massow has chosen his politics/class to be his primary identity signifier. Conservatives start from the point of view that if they and people like them are economically successful, then all is right with the world (no pun intended).

If the Establishment bus has slowed down enough for them to jump aboard then once they’re on, it can’t accelerate quickly enough to get them away from the oppression, prejudice and discrimination faced by the overwhelming majority of LGBT and BME people.

Ivan Massow – and the same goes for Alan Duncan, Priti Patel, Margot James and other LGBT and BME Tories – will simply point at themselves and say ‘I’m gay/black and look how well I’m doing’.

They are little more than well-spoken and willing apologists for organised greed and social indifference. ,

I have heard many people consistently try to denigrate the commanding role gay white men had in the creation of the modern gay movement. I have also taken the time to research who did what when. So to clear this up once and for all, as opposed to the vague comments, give me a list of 10 or so People of Color gay men who had a fundamental role in the creation of the movement. Thanks.

There is nothing ‘vague’ in my comments in so far as I am criticising him for a specific unacceptable comment and then linking it back to the racism so prevalent on the gay scene. The article in no way ‘tries to denigrate’ anyone. You seek to derail the subject by making a very general point about white supremacy in the gay rights movement, which has nothing to do with the core point of my article and actually just proves that racism is indeed prevalent.

[…] LGBTQ+ services are being slashed of their funding. There was almost undoubtedly pressure from Massow too, but this half hearted Act was pushed through simply to win headlines and direct attention away […]